12 GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN pIeces he Incorporates In hIS works. (Zabns- kie, 29 W 57th St. Open Mondays.) .. t]J An exhibit of Stankiewicz's earlier and large- scale work is at ZabriskIe's 521 W. 57th St gallery (Opens at 2; closed Saturdays) Both shows through Oct. 1 7 JEFF WAy-Convulsive-looking paintings of El- VIS Presley at work, a number of them por- trait heads of him done in the manner of Francis Bacon Also, a series of heads of Christ reminiscent of ancient woodblocks Through Saturday Oct 10. (Pam Adler, 37 W 57thSt) ISAAC WITKIN-New and relatIvely small-scale abstract sculptures in poured bronze some of them treated with aCIds to obtain a varie- gated patina, plus works in iron Through Saturday, Oct 10. (Hamilton, 20 W 57th St.) . . . t]J Three large-scale steel works are currently on view at Hammarskjöld Plaza Sculpture Garden, Second Ave at 47th St, and w1l1 remain there for several months SIRPA Y ARMOLINSKY- Wall hangings woven of heavy, handmade fibre ropes, constructions of tarpaper, and several colorful tapestries Through Saturday, Oct 10 (Arras, 29 W 57th St ) VLADIMIR ZAKRZEWSKI-Serial paIntings and draw- Ings, as In a comic strip, by a Polish artist with a Constructivist bent. FIrst one-man show in New York. Through Saturday, Oct 3 (Goodman 38 E 57th St.) GROUP SHows-At the ALEXANDER, 20 W 57th St.. PaintIngs and sculptures by eleven artists, most of whom express strong social feelings in works that are meant to shock, and do. Through Saturday, Oct 3.... BLUM HELMAN, 20 vV 57th St. Robert Moskowitz, Nell Jen- ney, Donald Sultan (paintings), and Bryan Hunt (sculptures) Through Saturday, Oct 10. .. HABER THEODORE, 29 W 57th St : Eleven European and American artists in an exhibi- tion of paintings (Michael Goldberg, Antoni Tàpies), sculptures (Louise Nevelson, Gio Pomodoro), and works on paper (Sam Fran- cis, Hans Hofmann) Through Saturday, Oct 3. . . . KENNEDY, 40 W 57th St : Romantic nine- teenth-century paintings of the American West in a loan exhibit that includes works by Albert Bierstadt, George Catlin, and a Swiss artist named Karl Bodmer, who accompanied Prince Alexander Philip Maximilian von Wied, of Germany, on an exploration (1832- 34) of the northern extremities of the MIS- souri RIver Through Friday, Oct 2. " MARKEL, 50 W. 57th St.: Works in mixed mediums dealing with the stars at night, by twenty-five artists. Through Saturday, Oct. 3.. . ODYSSIA, 730 Fifth Ave, at 57th St. Landsca pes b) Marjorie Portnow, Sandra Rubin, Wilham Beckman, and about twenty others Through Saturday, Oct. 10 GALLERIES-SoHo ROBERT BARRY AND CAROLE GAllAGHER-Works on paper b) the former, photographs by the lat- ter (greenhouse interiors and exteriors); and a Joint effort involving words and photographs projected on a wall Through Saturday Oct. 10. (Castelli, 420 West Broadway) JANET BRAUN-REINITZ- Works on paper-flowers, floral patterns anatomical studies Through Oct. 11. (PleIades, 15 2 Wooster St Open Sundays.) JEFFREY BROSK I JOSEPH SAlTZER-A thirty-three- foot-long installatIOn entitled ((Hemingway's Wall," which consists of concrete blocks, stucco, wood, and sand Through Saturday, , '... CD , . }: . , :( } . . S- .J .(J&. --. '-.. ".' ar -=-- ." --=--- ....,... -==------- .:;... -- ........ {}. . . . . ) S-M-T-W-T-F-S 4151613 ' I : I 3 10 Oct 3. I Closeup photographs of walls Through Wednesday, Oct 7. (Hutchinson, 138 Greene St ) HllO CHEN I NATHAN SLATE JOSEPH-Photo-Reah t wa tercolors of flowers. I Metal panels collaged with pieces of found metal Very durable works Through Saturday Oct 3 (Meisel, 141 Prince St ) JEAN COCTEAU (1889-1963)-Drawlngs, pastels, and ceramics. Through Oct 13 (Jack, 138 Prince St. Open Sundays) RAYMON ElOZUA I JACK RADETSKy-Miniature ce- ramIc sculptures of broken-down Industrial works as imagined by the artist I Folding screens on which shadowy representations of the interiors they belong in are painted Through Saturday, Oct. 10 (O.K Harris, 383 West Broadway) GEORGE GREENAMYER-Steel sculptures by an artist who pokes fun at Uncle Sam, bureau- crats, and suburban life styles Through Sat- urday. Oct. 10 (Neill, 136 Greene St.) K. H. HÓDICKE-A Berlin artist who paints large, vigorous figurative works in the Expressionist tradition of, say, Kirchner Through Oct. 24 (Nosei, 100 Prince St ) BUFFIE JOHNSON I GERALD SAMUEls-Paintings covering the past four decades, including one done during the nineteen-fifties as a study for one of the abstract murals in the Astor Theatre I Charcoal-and-graphite drawIngs of shells. Through Oct. 14. (Landmark, 469 Broome St Opens at 11:30 Tuesdays through Fridays, at noon Saturdays.) DON JUDD-A work, eighty feet long, composed of a row of massive wooden bins made of sanded marine plywood It occupies the whole north wall of this spacious gallery Through Oct. 17. (Castelli, 142 Greene St.) LucIo PozzI-Four large recent oils, apocalyptic in theme and violent in color Through Satur- day, Oct. 3. (Weber, 142 Greene St.) RODNEY RIPPS I LAURIE ANDERSON-Shaped paInt- ings in relief, mostly of clowns, astronauts, and angels. I Four audio-accompanied wall works. Through Saturday, Oct. 3 (Holly Solomon, 392 West Broadway.) ANDY W ARHOl-A show called "American Myths" Includes silk-screened portraits of Santa Claus, Greta Garbo, Howdy Doody, Mickey Mouse, and Warhol himself Dia- mond dust is incorporated in the processing of the works. Through Saturday, Oct 10 (Feldman, 31-33 Mercer St ) GROUP SHows-At the BOONE, 417 and 420 West Broadway' The works of seven gallery artlsts, including two new paintings by Ross Bleckner and a diptych by David Salle Through Wednesday, Oct. 7. . CHRISTIAN, 110 Greene St.: Forty Famous Californians- a show of works on paper which is intended to convince the East that Art is alive and thriv- ing on the West Coast. The guest curator is Michael Walls, and the artists include Rich- ard Diebenkorn, Sam Francis, Chris Burden, Robert Arneson, Bruce Nauman-big guns all. Through Oct. 14.... COWLES, 420 West Broadway: A selectIon of works by Dennis v... - ' \ :. ( >: \\t \1\ , '1\ \ 1--= - ! .\ \t. ... D, Ashbaugh, Tom Holland, and Alan Saret, plus photographs by Gerald Incandela Through Saturday, Oct 3.... THE DRAWING CENTER, 137 Greene St Recent works on paper by eleven emerging artists, including David Winter (acrylic and colored-pencil drawings), Thomas Corey (architectural representations on trans- lucent paper), and John Billingham (tiny paper sculptures) Through Oct 28. (Open Mondays, open Wednesday evenings until 8 ) . HOFFMAN. 429 West Broadway. New works by a number of the gallery artists, among them John Okulick, Joseph Raffael and Howard Buchwald Through Wednesday, Oct 7. SEMAPHORE, 462 West Broadway. Figurative works by thirteen artists, among them Alice N eel, J ed Garet, and Robert Lon- go Through Saturday, Oct 3. .. SPERONE WESTWATER FISCHER, 142 Greene St.. Drawings by Francesco Clemen te, Malcolm Morley, Julian Schnabel, and other prominent con- temporary artists. Through Oct. 17. . THORP. 419 West Broadway: A dozen gallery artists showing new works, including a paint- ing in which heavily impastoed fish form a pattern in a wall, by John Lees; a horse pay- ing homage to a satyr by David True; and a mysterious landscape by April Gornik Through Saturday, Oct 3. .. TOLL. in ne\\ quarters at 146 Greene St.: Nine gallery art- ists showing new work: a cryptic story told in pictures by Liliana Porter. a triptych paint- ing by Milo Reice; and a curious vase by Curtis Ripley. Through Saturday, Oct 10 OTHER GALLERIES SESQUICENTENNIAL TRIBUTE TO NEW YORK UNIVERSITY -A four-part exhibit in celebration of this Institution's hundred and fiftieth anniver- sary. Paintings by Jim Dine, Ad Reinhardt, and others from the university's collection, works from the collection of Dr and Mrs. John Brademas (the former is the president- designate of the university), including origi- nal posters by Robert Rauschenberg, Robert Indiana, and James Rosenquist, paintIngs by Ralph Fasanella of the Washington Square area, and one hundred photographs of the N.Y.U. neighborhood by André Kertész Through Oct. 17 (Grey Art Gallery, New York University, Washington Pl., Just east of Washington Sq. Tuesdays and Thursdays, 10 to 6:30; Wednesdays, 10 to 8.30. Fridays. 10 to 5; Saturdays, 1 to 5.) PHOTOGRAPHY EUGÈNE ATGET (1857-1927)-A hundred and twenty-five prints of the French countryside This is the first of four Atget shows planned by the Museum of Modern Art, which has more than five thousand of the photog- rapher's prints and negatives See below, under "Museums," for dates and times JOHN BAlDESSARl1 DEBORAH TURBEVillE-Starting with an enlarged, closely cropped photograph of a struggling snake, the artist has selected a number of other photographs-a football player, scuba divers-and trimmed them to fit a space identical to the snake's I Photo- graphs of Versailles, part of a series recently published as a book Through Saturday, Oct 10 (Sonnabend, 420 West Broadway.) NEll DORR-A fifty-year retrospective of this octogenarian's work, beginning with her por- traits of children in the Florida Keys during the twenties and including prints of nudes, flowers, and the numerous mother-and-child studies which she has done over the years Through Oct 16 (Pfeifer, 825 Madison Ave., at 69th St.) ; / . Z'!: .... " ". - --1;=- +- II' '-...a;-;- --- /' --